Xenografting of immature testicular tissue combined with cryopreservation can preserve and use genetic information of prepubertal animals. For establishment of this new approach, it is essential to clarify whether offspring derived from sperm grown in host mice harboring cryopreserved xenografts show normal reproductive development. This study examined serum profiles of gonadal hormones during sexual maturation in pigs generated by intracytoplasmic sperm injection using sperm derived from cryopreserved xenografts (CryoXeno pigs; three males and three females). We also assessed the reproductive abilities of the male CryoXeno pigs by mating them with conventionally produced (conventional) pigs, and by examining the in vitro fertilizing ability of their sperm. For female CryoXeno pigs, reproductive ability was evaluated by artificial insemination with semen from a conventional boar. During the growth of male CryoXeno pigs, the serum concentrations of inhibin and testosterone showed similar changes (P > 0.17) to those in conventional pigs (n = 4). Histologic analyses of the testes revealed no differences (P > 0.2) in the growth and differentiation of seminiferous tubules between CryoXeno and conventional pigs. Three conventional sows delivered 13.0 ± 1.0 (mean ± standard error of the mean) live piglets after being mated with the three CryoXeno males. Sperm obtained from all CryoXeno pigs had the ability to penetrate oocytes, and these fertilized oocytes reached the blastocyst stage in vitro. During the growth of female CryoXeno pigs, the serum inhibin profile was similar (P > 0.17) to that observed in conventional pigs (n = 5). The first rise in serum progesterone concentration to more than 2 ng/mL was noted at 32.0 ± 2.3 weeks of age in the CryoXeno pigs and at 32.0 ± 3.3 weeks in the conventional pigs, suggesting that both pigs reached puberty at a similar age. After puberty, female CryoXeno pigs farrowed 8.3 ± 1.7 (mean ± standard error of the mean; n = 3) live piglets after artificial insemination with semen from a conventional boar. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that both male and female CryoXeno pigs have normal reproductive abilities.
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